No, no, NOO! Please don't sleep through your biology lessons!
2007-12-17 09:09:23
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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No, that could not have happened.
If you're trying to reconcile the existence of dinosaur remains with your religious beliefs, then it doesn't make much sense to think that the bones came from another planet that merged to form Earth, since that idea would still contradict the Bible's account of the creation of the planet.
Although current theories about the creation of the solar system do consider the idea that the planets were formed at about the same time, all evidence of life that we have suggests that it did not begin to develop until approximately 3 billion years after the Earth was formed and cooled.
2007-12-17 17:12:59
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answer #2
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answered by Mr.Samsa 7
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No. First off, the process of planet formation would have crushed them to powder. Second, even if they'd survived, they would be in random places all over the Earth, not in relatively neat geographic locations with well-defined chronological separation by strata. Third, since the Earth was formed at roughly the same time as the Sun, it would mean that the bones would have to have come from a completely different star system. The distance alone would make it unlikely that any large number would make it here, even ignoring the problem with the time it would have taken.
2007-12-17 17:10:06
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Suppose for a second they could have. That opens up the question, did life on earth originate from another planet. Where did the dinosaurs evolve? Doesn't that prove evolution is dinosaurs evolved on another planetary body. After just these few off the top of my head--do you really want to go there lol?
2007-12-17 17:09:11
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Oh anything is possible with "god." Maybe "god" finished creating the earth, and then had to duck out of the way as dino fossils came flying in from outer space, and buried THEMSELVES in 200 million old rock that didn't exist according to The Big Story Book. But then, if this hilarity is to be accepted, then the "scientists" at the Creation Museum will have to change a few exhibits, and take the saddles off of the Triceratops, and get rid of the one showing "Eve" cavorting with Velociraptors.
2007-12-17 17:10:10
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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No. If they came from another planet they'd have been obliterated when they smashed into the Earth. When asteroids hit Earth they are usually vapourised. The likelihood there'd ever be enough to be recognisable as a fossil - let alone a complete skeleton, and not just one but hundreds is just impossible.
2007-12-17 17:10:13
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answer #6
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answered by Mordent 7
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Interesting concept.
I think the energy release when Earth collided with the other planet forming the moon was probably too high to fossils to have survived. The resulting heat would have melted most of the rock.
2007-12-17 17:09:31
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answer #7
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answered by ɹɐǝɟsuɐs Blessed Cheese Maker 7
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Dinosaur bones come from my house. I plant them secretly at night to test the faith of believers.
2007-12-17 17:08:40
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answer #8
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answered by Skalite 6
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not at all possible, if dinosaurs came here they would have used ships, since we find no huge metal objects near dinosaur bones we can conclude there are no ships. and dinosaur bones would most definitely disintegrate upon entering our atmosphere.
2007-12-17 17:09:52
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answer #9
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answered by Ryan, Atheati Magus 5
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Oh, noooooo ..please, let 'them' bones be from our own good ol' planet Earth. Can you imagine the logistics involved in transporting 'them' bones from another planet in a spaceship and then diggin' 'them' holes on Earth and bury them???? We have enough to figure out as it is!!!!
2007-12-17 17:09:59
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answer #10
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answered by irmanrosario 3
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Sure, entire skeletons would have been deposited delicately in the sediments while the two planets hit each other so hard one exploded.
2007-12-17 17:08:04
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answer #11
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answered by didi 5
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